If there’s one thing that the last five years of automotive technology have taught us is that we human beings are deficient. Woefully deficient. Despite numerous automotive safety advances — air bags, anti-lock brakes, vehicle stability control systems to name but a few — we’re still killing ourselves with remarkable regularity: 1,834 Canadians perished in automobile accidents in 2014, 32,675 in the United States. More troubling to our collective self-confidence, however, is that we’re now being told that we’re the primary cause of all these accidents and that a computer — sometimes it feels like any old computer would do — would be far more reliable than our own humble carbon-based selves.

And the numbers back that contention up. The American National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (the famed NHTSA) contends that 93 per cent of all fatal automotive collisions are the result of preventable human error, the key word being preventable. The implication is obvious: We humans are too slow, too unreliable and, most recently, too distracted to be trusted with high-speed machinery. In a word, imply the studies, we’re inferior.

Which made a University of Michigan report — Sensor Fusion: A Comparison of Sensing Capabilities of Human Drivers and Highly Automated Vehicles — that came across my desk last week an absolute must read. An exhaustive comparison between the technologies that let autonomous cars ‘see’ and the good old human eye, my expectations were, again considering the onslaught of positive publicity for computer-controlled cars, that the juxtaposition would not only expose, but specifically quantify, just how clearly deficient we humans really are compared with machines.

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In fact – surprise, surprise – the human eye, according to the author, Brandon Schoettle, is a pretty amazing sensor. Indeed, according to Schoettle, the human eye is in many ways vastly superior to the much-ballyhooed Lidar, radar and camera systems being trumpeted as the future of driving in most regards. In normal circumstances we can see further (1,000 metres compared with about 250m for the best of the automated seeing eye dogs), have a far wider field of vision, are better able to recognize what we are looking at and can track lanes far better than current automated systems. Only when it comes to our “dark or low illumination performance” – essentially our night vision – does the human eye let down the side, able only to see 75m (down from that 1,000 in daylight) with the help of automotive high beams. Despite this one disadvantage, it’s clear that the human eye is a truly amazing ‘sensor,’ requiring multiple technologies – again Lidar, radar and cameras – and even then multiple examples of each to match the distance and range it can detect potential dangers.

For instance, even accounting for our slower reaction times (the study that concluded there is a 2.5 second gap between impetus and reaction that Schoettle attributes to humans had to have been conducted in central Florida), our greater (daytime) vision would allow us to drive around at 405 kilmetres an hour and still stop in time for a hazard we see 1,000 metres distant. By comparison, a faster-reacting radar system is only good for 215 kilometres an hour and a stereo camera-based system barely half of that. Now, those are just theoretical calculations – I am assuming that Schoettle didn’t actually conduct any experiments on public roads to verify his thesis – but it does point out that we humans see so much further ahead than automated systems that even our delayed reaction times compared with digital drivers doesn’t diminish the fact that we often have more warning to potential hazards than automated systems.

Schoettle also points out the comparatively narrow range of vision of current sensors. Besides our peripheral vision, a simple crick of our neck widens the human range of vision considerably. And while we humans suffer from gaps in our vision – the “blind spots” caused by things like C-pillars – autonomous systems also suffer limits in sensor coverage, most notably line-of-sight obstructions, the study illustrating how significantly even just two adjacent vehicles can cut down a self-driving car’s field of vision compared with humans. In the cases illustrated by Mr. Schoettle, the other vehicle would have been visible to a human driver sooner than to a robotic one.

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Nor does this purely technical sensor evaluation account for any of the intangibles, i.e. human intuition. Schoettle cites the example of a vehicle about to make a left turn in front of traffic or about to cross a busy highway (the kind of situation that caught Tesla’s Autopilot out in 2016). While an autonomous vehicle would have to wait until the offending vehicle crossed into its path – something the NHTSA says “challenges the system’s ability to perform threat assessment, the target usually recognized very late or not at all prior to impact” – experience would already have the human driver monitoring the potentially offending vehicle and (if they were a completely paranoid biker like Yours Truly) subconsciously planning escape routes. Future autonomous systems with artificial intelligence (AI) may some day be able to emulate human intuition, but for now automotive technology can only react to situations, not anticipate them.

Indeed, after wading through 30 pages of Schoettle’s report, two conclusions jump out. One is that, as the author states, the most reliable road to full Level IV or V autonomy (that’s where a human doesn’t even have to be behind the wheel) is for all cars to be connected by dedicated short-range communications systems. By ‘talking’ to each other, cars could ‘virtually’ extend their sensor range to human levels and, combined with their quicker reaction times and greater processing power, truly deliver the greater safety that autonomous driving is touted to deliver. Without such a connection, sensor range would seem a notable deficiency, even compared to the human eye.

The other conclusion one can draw from the study — but which the author does not infer — is that, as Motor Mouth has long contended, the reason that we’re being bombarded with self-driving technology is that we’re simply not concentrating on our driving. As much of Schoettle’s study implies, it’s not that we are not capable of driving safely, it’s that – thanks to things like texting and impairment – we are unwilling. Indeed, if there is a lesson from Sensor Fusion: A Comparison of Sensing Capabilities of Human Drivers and Highly Automated Vehicles it isn’t that computers are better at driving than we are, it’s that they’re more reliable.

There’s a compliment in buried in there somewhere alongside the jarring conclusion that, as usual, we are the architects of our own demise.